for the IrTTIf THE PULPIT. A BP.UNT SUNDAV SERMON BV THE REV. W. H. M'MASTER. Themes The Gospel. Popularity of Alfalfa. According to the estimates of the Kansas State Hoard of Agriculture the area sown In alfalfa In that State has Increased from 267,376 acres In 1899 to 743.030 acres In 1907; the area fur 190$ Is not yet published. The estimates show a wonderful ad vance In the popularity of the crop In the Sunflower State. Weekly Wit ness. A Remedy For Colds. Hows are frequently troubled with roughs, colds, distemper and lung trouble, frequently attributed to dusty liav. A writer on the subject Rives a prescription which he says be has used .successively for over forty years and that his father, a horse doctor ot the old fashioned school, used it many years before his time. He says that the remedy Is perfectly safe and there Is no danger from giv ing a little over the regular dos". The prescription is as follows: Oil 'pine tar, one pint; oil nraganum, one ounce: powdered blond root, one ounce; powdered elecampane root, one ounce. Dose, rmo tablespoonful from three to five times a day. placed well back of the tongue. Weekly Witness. May Slacker. We think we have a good device t stacking alfalfa or other hay and fast, too, that might be helpful to ome of the readers and farmers and that is to have two four by four pieces of timber thirty feet Ion? that are clear of knot3 and bolt together t top. Dig a couple of holes In ground a foot deep and fifteen feet apart, opposite each other and place those four by fours In those holes and put two guy ropes one in each side and pull them up and stake good, but give them enough rope to let them have eight to ten feet each way from straight up and down, fasten pulley at crotch, tie end of one rope at crotch and put a pulley on It and then run it through pulley at crotch and down to another pulley staked good off at one side of derrick and one horse hitched on end of rope will handle the fork all right. Put hay fork on pulley as shown tn diagram. Haul hay or buck it up under guy rope No. 1 and leave der rick lean as it is and load fork and start horse, and when the fork gets to crotch let horse pull It over and Jerk trip rope as it goes, and It will throw hay a good distance. One man can stack after this device and build a stack twelve feet wide, thirty to fifty feet long and sixteen to twenty feet high. When you get fork un loaded pull derric-k back and load again: one. r.ian can load fork and trip It with a long trip rops and pull derrick back without getting off load, and a little boy can handle the horse or fork. Stake g.iy rope No. 2 off a little from one std", not much, just enough so ropo rub, stack good on one side, ami stake the pulley that horse is hitched to rope on the other side so It will pull straight and not upset.- E. A. McMillan, in Tim Economist. Sheep and Wool. E. II. Kins, I" a recent address be fore the Kansas Association of Im proved Breeders, made this compari son in behalf of sheep and wool pro fits a compared with cows. He said: "One hundred good grade ewes will cost about the same as ten good grade cows, will eat about the same the year through, and at the same per cent, ot Increase will return eighty lambs, worth $4 each, and 1000 pounds of wool, worth $175, as against eight calves, worth $10 each, and 200D pounds of butter, worth $300. Quite a difference In favor of the sheep, and they will run lu the pasture caring for themselves, and any of you who have milked ten cows through the year and hand-fed the calves, a. you tnuBt to get the butter returns, know that there is a great deal of labnr attached to that work. If the farmer does not have the alfalfa or clover to g with his corn, the sheep will thrive admirably upon prairie hay, wheat or flax straw, corn fodder, or sorgum or kafir corn, but as these are all highly carbonaceous, he should feed some bran or oats or oil meal with the corn to balance the ration. In 1901 my flock was con fined entirely to corn fodder and a half bushel per 100 head dally of a ration composed of wheat and cotton seed meal In equal parts, and did fine. "I fattened some old ewes for mar ket upon cottonseed meal and a very light fend of poor ihock corn. Some of the professors whom we consulted said: 'Don't feed any cottonseed nraaj to pregnant ewes.' But soma twenty bead ran with the fattening flock up to lambing and did well and raised good lambs." fed, the farmer will find that the hen after all really has little senti ment as to Just which season she shall produce her eggs. Getting eggs Is not entirely a mat ter of feeding, yet If we feed correct ly the hens will not have that as an actual obstacle to laying. Maturity and vigor are two Important things In the hens that are to be heavy win ter layers. Keep the hens in a thrify, vigorous condition, and be sure and feed a variety. These things count for a great deal toward success. Coin, oats and wheat are the three principal grain feeds, but there are others that may well be fed by way of variety, and the meat and green stuff In some form should never bo ne glected. Give any kind of meat scraps or prepared meat foods, as It pays. Try to keep the hen under conditions as near like those In ex istence at Bprlng time as you can, and you will not suffer severely from an egg famine. This is nothing Impos sible, and, briefly, only means com fortable housing, a variety of feeds, green stuff and meat scraps, and san itary quarters. Epltomlst. 5 -tr- -: f 1 - Neglected Agriculture. There are two branches of agri culture which pay larger than any others for the investments In them in the Central Western States, that are the most neglected. We refer to the dairy and poultry industries. It Is true that In a way they are both pur sued on the farm, but back in the years when butter sold for six and seven cents a pound, chickens $1.00 a doen, and eggs at five and six centt ";r dozen, the men on the farm taboov 'hem, and thought these In dustries were too trilling, and they have never gotten over It. It Is a good Illustration of the force of early habits, for It sticks to most farmers yet, though dairying and poultry de mands and prices have quadrupled In price in many respects. The ancient cows which made but two or three pounds of butter a week, and the dung-hill chicks that were In the same scant class, probably had some thing to do with forming this habit; but now that we have passed these things by. Isn't It time to take notice more generally and to give the most profitable Industries of the farm greater and more methodic attention? It is also to be said of the dairy in dustry that It is one of the greatest factors In keeping up soil fertility. Experience has shown that where dairying Is followed as a leading fea ture of the farm, that the average yield of corn and other crops are de cidedly Increasing. Corn and corn silage are leading features In the In dustry, as by this method, the greater productions of the farm are returned to the soil to enrich it. Rotating corn and clover, both of which are required in dairying, insures the nit rogen and humus so essential, tn the soil. Clover, or alfalfa where It can be grown, along with corn and corn sllnge make a good ration for cows, and make good rotations. With these farm crops but little bran and cottonseed meal are needed in dairy feeding to make a balanced ration. Indiana Farmer. I'iliug Wood to Season. The climate has much to do with the best method to be employed In piling green wood so that It will sea son. In the humid sections of the United States, says Farm and Home, It should be piled with plenty of space between the pieces, but In the arid regions it should be piled closer to prevent too quickly drying out and couaequent checking of the wood. Fig. 1 Bhows a very satisfactory method ot piling boards, planks and Feeding For Egg. Hens will not refuse to lay provid ing tbe conditions which surround tbem are favorable for egg produc tion. Of course a hen cannot keep on laying all tbe time, nor will some ben lay even, for a majority of tbe time, but tbe farmer who provides tbe correct conditions of housing, feeding aod general management find tbat be will not be entirely wjth out eggs at any time of tbe rear. (Of course, It Is not tbe ben'a nature to lay at this Uw of tbe year, but if be Is comfortably boused and well small dimension lumber. Inch strips tor edgings are placed near each end, and in the middle of the pile. The top course of boards is put on In th form ot a roof to shed the water Very useful methods of piling ties, posts and other timber are shown Id Figs. 2 and 3. In Fig. 2 very little room Is taken up, and at tbe aam time Individual pieces of timber toucfe at very few points, tbus permlttlns. air circulation on all sides ot tbt wood. When quick drying and sea soning Is wanted, Fig. 3 shows a bet ter method and tbe on commonlj J employed. ' Brooklyn, N. Y. The Rev. W. A McMaster, pastor of Embury Memo rial M. E. Church, has been holding special evangelistic services for some time, which bBve been most success ful. In connection with these services he preached, Sunday morning, on "The Gospel as the Philosophy of History." The text was from Act 13:26: "To you Is the word of this salvation sent." Mr. McMaster said: This direct announcement Is from the first recorded missionary address of St. Paul. He and Barnabas had only recently started from Antloch in Syria, upon their first missionary tour. Barnabas, perhaps a convert of Pentecost, had been sent to take charge of the great revival in Antl och, which had broken out simulta neously with Peter's opening the door of Christianity at Caesarea, and ad mitting, by baptism, Cornelius and his family, the first Gentile converts to Christianity. This action of Peter was a great and significant Innova tion. He certainly was using the keys which our Lord had given him. This revival at Antloch was a revival among the Gentiles, and the work was growing to such an extent that Barnabas must have help, and he thought of Paul, a man he had met It Jerusalem some eight years be fore, and though the Jews made it ?o hot. for Paul that Barnabas had known him but two weeks, he be lieved that Paul was the man of the Dour. He went to Tarsus, where Paul had been obscurely working and waiting for eight years how long God makes some of Ills servants wait but now the man was ready and the times were ripe, and when the Church of Antloch, here for the first time called "Christian," decided In true missionary spirit to send mes sengers of the great salvation to the Gentiles, Paul stands at last face to face with the world he Is to conquer. To show you the elements which make up this world which Paul faces, I take you to the Isle of Cyprus, their first halting place, and which, strange .o say, presents In miniature the great world with which Christianity must cope. Paphos, the chief town, "was the sat of the worship of Venus, the goddess of love, who was laid to have been boVn of the foam it the sea at this very spot, .and her worship was carried on with the wild st licentiousness. It was a picture in miniature of Greece Bunk in moral leeay." Beauty divorced from mor- tlity was thi outcome of Greek art I ind culture. "Paphos was also the teat of the Roman Government, and 1 in the proconsular chair sat a man, 1 Sergius Paulus, whose noble 'charac- :er but utter lack of faith formed a companion picture of the Inability 3f Rome at that epoch to meet the leepest necessities of her best sons." In this same court was a Jewish sor erer and quack, named Elymas, whose playing by his arts upon the nqulrer's credulity was a picture of ! :he depths to which the Jewish char- 1 icter could sink. Paul, representing the Gospel of Christ, entered this situation. He ;overed the Jewish magician with llsgrace, converted the Roman gov ernor, and founded In the town a Christian church in opposition to the 3reek shrine. Leaving Cyprus, let is now hasten to Antloch In Pisidia, :heir first halting place in the ln :erler of Asia Minor, where a typical icene occurs which, because It is typ cal, we shall describe. In the light )f history the coming of Paul and Barnabas to a town was the most Big- alficant event and worthy to be i narked by processions and a gorg- , sous reception; but how different the i eallty. These two walk into AntI- j )ch as any two strangers would come j Into Brooklyn. First they find a odglng, and then they look for work. ! Imagine Paul going from door to door ! if tentmakers inquiring for work, j Dn the Sabbath Day they go to the ' tynagogue and Join lu the psalms ! ind prayers and listen to the law ' (perhaps the first chapter of Deuter nomy), and to the prophets (per laps the first of Isaiah). Then the uler of the synagogue turns to the jtranger.f and usks ihern If they have Iny word of exhortation to the peo- ue. i ins is raui s opportunity. He irises, and, beckoning attention with i lis hand, launches upon the sea of i lebrew history,-suggested by the aw, and eiplains the fulfillment of ealah In Jesus Christ, and declares 'To you is the word of this salvation lent." The people gather about him ifter the assembly is dismissed and keg him to come back next Sunday. 3e explains the gospel to inquirers la he works through the week, and tn the next Sabbath almost tbe whole lity assembles to hear hlra; but when le declares that this salvation Is for tbe Gentiles, the Jews grow jealous ind soon stir up persecution and ;ompel them to leave the town. Thus, while his great mission was to preach tbe gospel, his great barrier was Jewish exduslveness and his chlel and Immediate work took tbe form if championing the cause ot Gentile treedom and propping open, so that no man could shut it, the door wblcb Peter wad privileged to open. The greatest battles of human his tory have been battles for freedom, and each struggle has had Its hero. Battles for national freedom Moses for enslaved Israel, Washington foi the oppressed colonies. Battles for freedom of conscience Luther and Knox. Battles for human rights Wilberforce and Garrison, Battles, battles for catholic thought and a uni versal gospel Paul, t ho apostle to the Gentiles! The rest of my sermon shall be an elaboration of three great points which I gather from this great, typical missionary speech of St. Paul: 1. How the history of the world Is transfigured In the light of the gospel Into the history of tbe King dom ot God. The present time Is vitally con cerned with history. The criticism it historical, archeology Is historical, philology Is historical, evolution la historical and the profound search ot human thought Is for a key to history, a philosophy of history. St. Paul's address vai historical. He went back through tbe national history of tbe chusen soople; ani hlle it vui historical, the name or God Is in every sentence. No speech was ever more bold in Its assertion of God In history. To tbe speaker, bis tory was not cbaotle, wltb no purpose or goal; not an eddying current, but a gre.it Gulf Stream, flowing on .wltb gathering momentum and speed to ward a "far off and divine event." The history was progressive, evjlu tlcuary, and the goal ot evolution Is freedom In the Kingdom ot God. "The law" what was that but the necessary objective standard In tbe old tlsced of rompuUlon and foiee, but now 1u tbe freedom ot love ab csisl tr Chrlrf who iiA-nd at Hie taw to every one tbat belfeveth, and to bring us to Christ, the law as a schoolmaster was ordained. The prophets! What were they but the awakening of visions as tbe Insufficiency of law became manifest and the declaring and promising on divine authority a great Incarnation of suffering, atoning love, who would be the fulfilling of all the law and the prophets? All the promises and prophecies of Israel's history are de clared fulfilled In the coming of Jesus Christ. And now t arrive at tbe second great proposition: 2. 'Jesus ChrlBt Is the centre of h"man history, ful filling Its law and propre?v( and fur nishing the type-man and liberator of all humanity. Let me quote Dr. Martlnsen: "The perfect revelation of the wonder-working Providence of God Is presented in the Incarnate Logos, in the world-redeeming, soul saving manifestation of God in Christ. Human history finds its centre. Its true meaning, In tbe revelation of Jesus Christ. It is only In the light which comes from Him, that human ity can look back upon a past which Is full of meaning, ran look forward to a future full of promise, and can contemplate Its development as an organic whole. Human history, which moves on apart from Christ, without desire for, or belief In Him, knows neither beginning nor end It is objectless, It has no centre." Now, we have been looking over large areas and asserting vast gen eralizations. We have discovered a philosophy of history, that It hns a purpose which is redemptlonal, that It hns a goal which Is freedom, that It has a centre and head which Is Christ, that Is has a glorious consum mation In the future which Is the Kingdom of Christ and God. I want now to remind you that God governs the mass by governing the atom; that He swings the currents of history as He Is able to control the Individuals. What we have read writ large in hu man history, can we not read In our own Individual lives? Is there not a philosophy of your personal history? May not some key of spiritual sig nificance be applied to the puzzling experiences of your life and unlock the hidden meaning? As- the Gospel Is the revelation of God's redemptlon al purpose In history and as Christ Is Its centre, so the whole of your life will fall of meaning and interpreta tion until you view It In this light. Were you born amid Bibles and Sun day schools, and pastors and teach ers? What for In God's providence but to learn of His will concerning you? Were your first conscious views centered in the starry eyes of mother, whose fair face heavened you over as a starry firmament? What was It but to elicit your smile and to teach you love? Have you struggled with mystery and battled with pas sion? What for but to develop your strength? Have you been afflicted? What for but to scourge you back to God? Have you been defeated, and has the burden of sin rested like a load on your conscience? What for. but to drive you to the cross of Christ, where kneeling In penitence. His blood washes your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? Have you been believed and have you refused to be comforted? What does It mean but that you should take that lonely aching heart to Him who alone can heal it and fill its depths whlcb He has reserved for Himself alone? "To you is the word of this salva tion sent." This Is my third point. This salvation is for you. It inter prets your past. It opens up your fut ure. It makes the past full ot God's patient seeking and beckoning love for your heart. Won't you embrace' Christ as your All in All this morn ing, and find In Him remission of all your sins, and freedom from its pow er? "Whom the Son makes free is free Indeed." This battle against sin Is the greatest battle of all for free dom, and Christ is its Champion and the Great Emancipator. It is through Him and His loyal servants In his tory that you have freedom ot tbe Gospel, freedom of conscience, of knowledge, of speech and of press, of body, of nation. Will you not accept the great salvation with Its Inner per sonal freedom from the power of sin and Satan? He Is the Good Shepherd and He is seeking you. "He will seek until He finds." Yes. and He desires not only to find you, but to carry you with all your bruises and burdens, and establish you in the fold ot His church, giving you relations to it and fitting you into His eternal kingdom, which Is the final consummation of all things. Sunba:j-Scftocf INTERNATIONAL LESSON COM MENTS FOR MARCH 21, Review of-the Lesson For the First Quarter Golden Text: "They That Were Scattered Abroad Went Everywhere Preaching the Word." Acts 8:4. The lessons of the quarter extend Over a period of perhaps ten years, from Thursday, May 18, A. D. 30, to perhaps A. D. 40. They are all con cerned with the things that Jesua continued to do after til resurrection through the Holy Spirit. A profitable review can be conducted along the line of the power of the Risen Christ. Lesson I. shows us the RUen Christ as the Giver of the Holy Spirit. Lesson II. again shows us the Risen Christ as the Giver of the Holy Spirit. Lesson III. shows us the Risen Christ exalted, receiving from the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, and pouring Him forth on the church Lesson IV. shows us the Risen Christ healing and making Btrong tbe man born lame. Lesson V. shows us the Risen Christ bestowing the Holy Spirit upon Hia faithful servants and making them fearless in the presence of great peril. It also shows us the Risen Christ as the only One In whom there Is salvation. Lesson VI. shows us the Risen Christ executing Judgment In His church. Lesson VII. shows us the Risen Christ delivering His faithful serv ants from peril and filling them with dauntless courage. , Lesson VIII. shows us the Risen Christ Imparting power and grace to His faithful servant. It also shows us the Risen Christ in the glory at the right hand of God. Lesson IX. shows us the Risen Christ bestowing the Holy Ghost in answer to the prayer of His servants. Lesson X. shows ub the Risen Christ winning a man of great au thority to Himself. Lesson XI. shows us the Risen Christ making whole the sick and raising the dead. E MARCH TWENTY-FIRST, Our Two Natures. There are two natures in man that are as distant as day and night. With the old Adam within us If we do not keep him down In the place of death he brings us into captivity. It takes us about all our lifetime to find out who and what we are, and when we think we know something happens to make us think we are farther away than when we started. The heart Is deceitful above all things. In the sixth chapter of Romans it Is written: "Knowing this, that our old man Is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve Bin. For he that is dead is freed from sin." And in the eleventh verse there are Just three words to be es pecially considered: "Reckon your selves dead." If we were really dead we would not have to reckon our selves dead. Judicially we are dead, but In reality we are still fighting the world, the flesh and the devil. Some people seem to think they have got away from the flesh, and that they are soaring away In a sort of seventh heaven, but they get back again soon er or later. You cannot make the flesh anything but flesh. It will be flesh all the time. D. L. Moody. Get Away With God Alone. Man is no better than a leaf drlv- i en by the wind until he has conquered his lonely duties. This makes a man the habit ot confronting great I things in solitude, and chiefly the j habit of conversing with God alone, ' and of filling the soul with His , strength. For, remember, the man who la a stranger to these habits of solitude Is neither his own master nor the possessor ot his own house. He owns a great house, and an eter nal house, but it is shut up and locked, and he lives outside, "until in his solitude he Join God unto him self." J. Pulsford. The Light of Love. The effort to do right does not necessarily lead to tbe happy, spon taneous and loving practice ot good ness. This Is to be found not in the law. but In the gospel; not in the sight of duty, but in tbe sight of love. It Is affectionate, filial grati tude for unbought, unearned mercy. It Is the great love of him who has been forgiven much. James Free man Clarke. No Stumbling. -No man ever ctumblcs over bis neighbor when be Is walking wltb God. Tope's Unused Return Ticket. An American gentleman who re cently bad a private audience with tbe Pope relates a touching story of bis experience. He says tbat His Hol iness took from his pocket during tbe Interview a small, handsomely chased silver bos or case, similar to a purse, and, opening it, showed his visitor tbe unused halt ot a round-trip rail way ticket from Venice, to Rome and i?: int. He explained tbat when be iau.it to the conclave of cardinals to elect a successor to Leo XIII. be pur chased tbat ticket and fully expected It to carry blm back to bis bome, but God changed his plans for him. He did not murmur, although be would much prefer to be In bis old bom ad Joining Bt. Mark's Cathedral In Ven ice and among his beloved parishion ers than occupy bl exalted but lone ly throne In tbe Vatican. And with tears In his eyes His Holiness said tbat he kept this little relic always on bis person, and It gave him great comfort to take It out and Inspect It. Washington Star. His Own Pilot. A bright boy, who loved the sea, entered on a sailor's life when very ! young. He rose to quick promotion, ! and while quite a young man was j made the master of a ship. One day : a passenger spoke to him upon the j voyage, and asked if he should an- j chor off a certain headway and tele- j inr a nllnf tn take the vessel into port. "Anchor? No, not I. I mean to be In dock with the morning tide. I am my own pilot," was the curt reply. intant ti nnn rpncht nor nort bv morn ing he took a narrow channel to save distance. Old. bronzed, gray-headed ! seamen turned their swarthy faces to tho sky, which boded squally weath er, and shook their heads. Wo need not describe a storm at sea. Enough to say that the captain was ashore earlier than he promised tossed sportively upon some weedy beach, a dead thing thatthe waves were weary of and his queenly ship and costly freight were scattered over the surfy acres of an angry sea. Expositor. A Sign of Greatness. The highest greatness Is that whlcb Is unconscious of Itself. The very forth-putting of an effort to be greal in any direction indicates that we lack that greatness. How true this is in art, for example, every one who has had an artist among bis friends can tell. The greatest achievements made by tbe sculptor or painter have been those in which they have been least conscious of their greatness. So, too, in the Christian life, which it tbe grandest of all arts, we have not yet attained so long as we are con scious ot exertion. If I make an ef fort to be humble, then very clearly I have not reached the perfect humil ity, tor it I had, that grace would all upon me as unconsciously as do my garments. "Moses wist not tbat the skin of bis face shoue while he talked with Him." Dr. W. M. Taylor. No Reason For Envy. We who have the Sun need no' nvy those who sawthe Star. CONUNDRUMS. AND ANSWERS. ' When Is a newspaper like a deli cate child? When it appears. weekly.' Why is the Fourth of July like an oyster? Because we cannot enjoy It without crackers. What tree Is of the greatest Im portance In history? The date. Why Is Sunday the strongest day In the week? Because It Is tbe only one not a week day. What Is always behind time? Tbe back of the clock. On what day ot the year do wom en talk the least? Tbe shortest day. Why is music cheaper on Bun day than during tbe week? Because during the week you can get It by tbe piece, and on Sunday you get It by the choir. Why 1 a washerwoman like Satur day? Bocansa she brings la tbe close (clotBos) of tbe week. What Is tbat whlcb occurs twice In a moment, and not once In a thou sand years? Tbe letter "m." Why is a watchdog larger by night than by day? Because at night he la let out and by day be Is taken In. Be Hive. Topic Pilgrim's Progress 8erles. III. The Wicket Gate. Matt. 7: 7-14. Hindrances In the way. Luke 14: 25-35. The christ door. John 10: 7-16. The door of faith. Eph. 2: 18-22. An open door. Rev. 3: 7-11. Tbe door of love. 1 John 3: 14-19. The need of perseverance, Luke 9: 57-62. What Is easier than 1-nocking at a door? What If we could enter any other door, of a palace, a bank or a treasure house, just by knocking! (r. 7). Tou cannot be too; great a sinner to be admitted to God's forgiveness, If you will only knock (v. 8). The way to sin Is wide and easy. It is easy to prove thla (v. 13). The way to eternal life Is difficult because eternal life Is -vorth while; and we must become vrth while (v. 14). Mount Slnal and '' i Gate. Christians meet Mr. ",'orldly Wise man all along the wrv and at all times. He Is one of Satan's commer cial travelers. The town of Carnal Policy Is near the City of Destruction and breathes the same air. Worldlings have mii''i to say about the dangers and troubles of the Chris tian way; but wait till Chrlstlms do! "A good moral man" Is a Christian to the unthinking, and the village of Morality Is as far as many so-called Christians get. Legality's son Civility takes the place of piety In the town of Moral ity. If one Is polite enough one Is good enough there. We revere Slnal because it was the prophecy of Calvary; but now Cal vary has come, the least Christian Is greater than the greatest under the law. Evangelist has not only to start men on the way. but to warn and di rect them In the way. Evangelist proves his fitness by his ready use of the Bible. Cross blood sacrifice salvation the highest words of Christianity, are all scorned by worldlings. tPWDRTTLEAGuf LESSONS SUNDAY, MARCH 21. Facing Our Record Matt. 25: 31-46; Luke 3: 17 The Theme and the Scriptures. Matt. 25: 31-46. This entire pas sage Is a warning and encouragement to all to make dally preparation, by careful attention to the details of their lives, for facing the final rec ord of life. This coming of Christ In his glory will not be to establish a kingdom, but to receive all the world for judgment. At this time the worthy nnd unworthy will pass into eternul separation. That the line of cleavenge will be fundamental, not ncidental. Is Indicated by the phrase, sheep from the goats." It will not be the separation of blemished sheep from the unblemished, but It shows that the good and evil have become fundamentally and eternally different n character. The invitation to 'Come, Inherit." Is a call not only to a reward, although it will be such, but also to perfect one's claim and title. Inherit through Christ. The basis of the final Judgment of each will be what one has become through his ministrations in this world. No amount of abstract goodness or baif ness will weigh In that day. To put It broadly, the daily round of one's activities determines his future sphere. Some surprises will obtain In that day, and many will be aston ished to see who have been the suc cessful ones and who have failed "In esmuch as ye have done It," will be Christ's final thought In pronouncing Judgment. The adjustment at this time will be eternal. Luke 3: 17. Jesus came "fan in hand, that Is, with authority and prepared to cleanse, thoroughly, effec tively, his threshing floor. All of thla Is to say that ho came to prepare his agencies for the process of separat ing the good from the evil, not as In the Judgment, but In the daily outr working of their lives. FRUIT GROWERS FLOCK ro souTnwEST texas. Climate and Soil Found to' Be Ideal For Production of Oranges and Lemons. Remarkable development In the raising of citrus fruits, especially Oranges and lemons, Is going on In the portion of Southwest Texas around San Antonio and as far south as the Rio Grande Valley and the Gulf. F. C. Hutchinson, ot Ventura County, California, established one of the largest orchards near Deevllle about a year and a half ago, and he reports that numerous other Cali fornia fruit growers are migrating Into this part ot Texas, tbat orange groves, lemon groves and vineyards are going on In every direction. "Southwest Texas Is 1500 miles :loser to the markets than Califor nia," says Mr. Hutchinson, "and the trult matures here two months earl ier. The sandy loam wltb the red slay subsoil whlcb Is found in a num ber ot localities Is Ideally adapted to orange and lemon culture. It pro duces In greater quantities than the California soli. One tree In our neighborhood this year by actual count produced 8150 oranges, an other one produced more than four thousand. So far our orchards are young and most ot our shipments have been local, but In two or three years we will be competing on a large scale with California and Florida. When my trees are five years old I expect to net from tbem from $250 to f 500 an acre." Orange groves are being set out around tbe city of Ban Antonio, at Oakville, in Live Oak County. In Re fugio County, .in Corpus Christ!, Fal furrlas and In the Lower Rio Grande Valley, known as the Brownsville country. New York Herald. Just Between Lady Frea's. Sadie -"Say, honest, now, do you like Maggie?" Pauline "Well she' got a good heart an' she means real well, but Sadie "Neither do I." Puck. aw . naxnerca tot we ogiETriquij RESURRECTION. Little brown buds on the tips of the trees. Swaying about in the icy-cold breeze. Wrapped up so tightly you scarcely can freeze, Are ye the heralds of Spring? Little brown bulbs buried deep in the ground, Sending your leaves through the clods tbat unround. Quietly working, with never a sound, Blooms to perfection bring. Little brown chrysalide, hidden from sight, Waiting for sunshine's beneficent might, Boon to burst forth into radiance bright, Gladsome as bird on the wing! Dearly loved sleepers, laid down in the earth ! . Buried with you all our light-hearted mirth! Ye, too, are waiting a glorious birth, Christ's Resurrection to sing. Bright Sun of Righteousness, shine through our gloom! Teach us that Life only Kop in the tomb, Soon to awake in more gln'ious bloom, Since Thou lni.t vanquished Death's sting. Shine in our hearts, blo.vi Sunlight of love. Lighten our darkness, r.i earth-lights re move, .Waiting Thy promise to come from above, Joyfully Springtime to bring! A. M. L., in London Christian. l Onr Unconscious Influence. Are there not many persons who find In the theatre precisely that kind of recreation and rest which is most useful for the discharge of their dally work? "It may be," said Mr. Spurgeon, "but I don't know any of them. You see, I live In a world apart from all these things, and so do my people. We argue this way: Granting It per fectly safe and profitable for myself to go to the theatre; if I go, a great number of those will go to whom it will do positive harm. I will not be responsible for alluring by my exam ple Into temptation, which but for my self-indulgence they would entirely escape. "I will give you an Instance of bow this works out. When I go to Mon aco, the grounds of the gambling bell there are the most beautiful in tbe world. I never go near them, and why? Not because there Is any dan ger of my passing through the gar dens to the gambling tables. No; but a friend of mine once related the fol lowing incident to me: " 'One day Mr. Blanc met me, and asked me how it was I never entered his grounds. "Well, you see," I said. "I never play, and as I make no re turns whatever to you, I hardly feel Justified in availing myself ot the ad vantage of your grounds." "You make a great mistake." said Mr. Blanc. "If it was not for you and other respect able persons who come to my grounds I should lose many ot the customers who attend my gambling saloons. Do not Imagine that because you do not play yourself you do not by your pres ence In my grounds contribute mate rially to my revenue. Numbers of persons who would not have thought of entering my establishment feel themselves perfectly safe in following you into my gardens, and thence to the gambling table, the transition is easy.' " "After I heard that," continued Mr. Spurgeon, "I never went near the gardens. And the same argument applies to the theatres." Pall Mall Gazette. The Higher and Lower Criticism. " "There came wise men from the East to Jerusalem, saying, Where is He that is born King ot the Jews? Fcr we have seen His star. Herod demanded of them where ChrlBt should be torn." (Matt. 2:1, 2 and 4). Here are two inquiries of very much the same nature, so far as words are concerned. The wise men and Herod both aak about tbe child Jesus, and ask In nearly identical terms. What Is the difference? It lies In tbe motive. The wise men in quire that they may bring their gold; Herod inquires that he may kill. There is a reverent, and there is an irreverent, spirit of Inquiry. There Is a criticism which comes from love, and a criticism which comes from lovelessness. There are two reasons why I may wish to study a difficulty; I may want to clear it away, or I may want to deepen it. The wise men were the one; Herod was the other. It is not tbe subject of inquiry that makes it either good or bad, it is the spirit in which it is done Why do you pole over a blot on the manu script? Is it because you want to take It out, or Is it because you hope It will spoil tbe writing? ' There are things which "tbe angels desire to look into;" there may be students among the angels In all worlds. But if I desire to look into a thing that I may find it dark, it I wish to investigate on tbe chance that 1 may discover a flaw, I belong, not to the camp of the angels, but to the camp ot Herod. George Matbe son, D. D. Vanguard of Christ. Missionaries In the foreign field are the front rank men In tbe army of Christ. Unless we be branded as dis loyal or cowardly, we, who stand be hind tbem, are bound to keep them well supplied with arms and ammuni tion, toven though we may not be called on personally to fill up the gaps often made In our firing line. Dr. Alfred Rowland. Also True in Religion. Winston Churchill's recent dictum, that "Nobody oughttohave everything till everybody has something," is as true In the religious as in the eco nomic sphere, and yields a sufficient reason for foreign missions, if there were no other. Rev. William H. Findlay. The Real Trouble. Probably most of the difficulties of trying to live the Christian Ufa arise from attempting to bait live it. Henry Drummoud. j NECESSITY PAST. Congress bad been asked would It please do something for the Dela ware. "Delaware?" repeated tbe mem bers, with a pusxled air, "what's that?" "It's a river that Washington once crossed,1' explained an advanced rep resentative of the people. " "Well, he got across all right, didn't he? responded th Inquirer. "What's th us of Improving the river now?" Philadelphia Lodger.